If this whole topic comes over as stupid or me not knowing what I am talking about, that is because I am new to Ponyfinder and DND-like industry, it can be a bit confusing to dig through the book history.

I am just guessing of course that the 5E rework also cleaned up many of the flaws the reviewer found for it. Assuming I am correct this far, my final questions is, what is the companies policy for people who bought the original PDF version? (Aka, the one reviewed but can no longer be bought) I completely understand that you cant just hand people new books all the time, even if they are rule translations of books they already own.(Such as the Griffons of Everglow, which are two separate book.)But if you updated the normal book with 5E ruling and combined the two into one, effectively making the old book outdated and not purchasable, does he get access to the new PDF?

Mind you, this question is only in regards to ownership of the PDF not physical copies, as I can fully understand a physical book becoming "outdated".

Cool, I really appreciate that kind of business practice and it gave me the final push over the edge to grab two more of books available. As a final question to this topic, and this is pure curiosity and not really that important. why is the Griffons of Everglow the odd book out that seemingly didnt get a combined 5e/pathfinder release